Haruki Murakami Quotes
To Do That Cinnamon Had To Fill In Those Blank Spots In The Past That He Could Not Reach With His Own Hands. By Using Those Hands To Make A Story, He Was Trying To Supply The Missing Links. From The Stories He Had Heard Repeatedly From His Mother, He Derived Further Stories In Attempt To Recreate The Enigmatic Figure Of His Grandfather In A New Setting. He Inherited From His Mother's Stories The Fundamental Style He Used, Unaltered, His Own Stories: Namely, The Assumption That Fact May Not Be Truth, And Truth May Not Be Factual. The Question Of Which Parts Of Story Were Factual And Which Parts Were Not Was Probably Not A Very Important One For Cinnamon. The Important Question For Cinnamon Was Not What His Grandfather Did But What His Grandfather Might Have Done. He Learned The Answers To This Question As Soon As Succeed In Telling The Story.
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